Too many articles will tell you what is cool in web design. I’m going to take you past the obvious to make some real predictions. 1. Gestures are the new clicks We forget how hard scrolling webpages used to be. Most users would painstakingly move their mouse to the right edge of the screen, to […]

Today I'm going to introduce you to two elements: and , part of the Interactive Elements specification. The web has evolved into something more than just linked documents; pages behave increasingly these days like apps. As such, it's an appropriate time to form standard web interactivity features. | Difficulty: Beginner; Length: Short; Tags: HTML5, JavaScript, HTML

Finally, true responsive images are becoming a reality on the web — in pure HTML, without convoluted hacks. The <picture> element and a couple of new attributes for the <img> element are behing a flag in Chromium 37 (so coming soon in Opera), in Firefox Nightly and are being implemented in WebKit (although it remains to be seen if Apple will ship it in the next version of Safari).

Free colorful icons set from PixelKit perfect to use as logos, buttons or as promotion graphics for your website or print design. Completely editable, and fully layered in Adobe Photoshop (resizable). All icons are Adobe Photoshop vector shapes.

Using the proper tools and instruments will help you to debug your web apps painlessly, all from within the browser. Today, let's take a look at Deb.js, a library designed to help you do just that. | Difficulty: Beginner; Length: Medium; Tags: Web Development, JavaScript & AJAX, HTML/CSS, Debugging, Google Chrome

This article introduces WURFL.js that provides an easy-to-use, reliable and scalable alternative to traditional server-side device detection, all the while complementing other client-side techniques and tools.